Spanish
Finance Minister in Germany Pleads for Temporary Credit Line to Halt
an "Imminent Financial Collapse"
24
July, 2012
Spain
faces a bond rollover of €28 Billion in October and is rightfully
scared about 2-year bond rates of 6.5%.El
Economista notes
the Spanish economy minister is at a meeting in Berlin to
discuss Government
Request for a Credit Line to Save the Year and
forestall an imminent financial collapse.
This is a heavily Mish-modified translation from the article ....
This is a heavily Mish-modified translation from the article ....
Luis de Guindos will meet with Wolfgang Schäuble to negotiate measures noting the ECB is already 19 weeks without buying debt.
Eeconomy minister, Luis de Guindos, now travels to Germany for talks with German Finance Minister, Wolfgang Schäuble. The appointment is key because Spain is running out of time. With the 10-year bond about 7.5% and the risk premium on the 632 basis points, Guindos nevertheless insisted that Spain will not have to ransom all for a full sovereign bailout.
Instead, he asks for the European Central Bank (ECB) to resume purchases of Spanish bonds in the market.
Guindos believes Mario Draghi is not the problem. Rather, bond purchases have stopped primarily because Germany is opposed. To mutate this position and to convince Schauble to give permission to his emissaries at the ECB, Jörg Asmussen, and Jens Weidmann, Luis de Guindos traveled to Germany
Analysts are unanimous: An imminent financial collapse is at stake. If pressure on Spanish bonds continues and Treasury loses its access to the bond market, Spain cannot cope with the massive debt maturity that awaits him in October, close to the 28 billion euros. Amounts may be even greater if Spain has to funnel money to the regions requesting the help of special liquidity fund.
Therefore, sources close to the government have admitted they are considering other alternatives. For example, the negotiation of a temporary line of credit with which to address the maturity of its debt, and perhaps even financial assistance for Spain's regional governments.
This option is based on a premise well known in the eurozone, of buying time. A credit line would serve to dampen fears today, waiting for the agreements reached at the June summit, including the implementation of a single banking supervisor and an operational Stability Mechanism.
For
starters, when it comes to these bailouts, there is no such thing as
"temporary". Regardless, I believe Germany will reject the
request, thereby forcing Spain into a full sovereign bailout.
12
Signs That Spain is
Shifting from Recesion to
Depression
24
July, 2012
Where
have we seen this before? Bond yields soar above the 7 percent
danger level. Check. The stock market crashes to new
lows. Check. Industrial activity plummets like a rock and
the economy contracts. Check. The unemployment rate
skyrockets to more than 20 percent. Check. The bursting
of a massive real estate bubble pushes the banking system to the
brink of implosion. Check. Broke local governments beg
the broke national government for bailouts. Check. The
international community pressures the national government to
implement deep austerity measures which will slow down the economy
even more and hordes of violent protesters take to the streets.
Check. All of this happened in Greece, it is happening right
now in Spain, and mark my words it will eventually happen in the
United States. Every debt bubble eventually bursts, and right
now Spain is experiencing a level of economic pain that very, very
few people saw coming. The recession in Spain is rapidly
becoming a full-blown economic depression, and at this point there is
no hope and no light at the end of the tunnel.
The
bad news for the global economy is that Spain is much larger than
Greece. According to the United Nations, the Greek economy is
the 32nd largest economy in the world. The Spanish economy, on
the other hand, is the 4th largest economy in the eurozone and the
12th largest economy on the entire planet. It is nearly five
times the size of the Greek economy.
Financial
markets all over the globe are very nervous right now because if the
Spanish government ends up asking for a full-blown bailout it could
spell the end for the eurozone. There simply is not enough
money to do the same kind of thing for Spain that is being done for
Greece.
Of
course European officials are going to do their best to keep the
eurozone from collapsing, but what they have completely failed to do
is to keep these countries from falling into depression.
As
I have written about previously,
Greece has already been in an economic depression for some time.
I
warned that Spain, Italy, Portugal and a bunch of other European
nations were going down the
exact same path.
Now
we are watching a virtual replay of what happened in Greece take
place in Spain.
Unfortunately,
the global financial system may not be able to handle a complete
implosion of the Spanish economy.
The
following are 12 signs that Spain is shifting gears from recession to
depression....
#1 At
one point on Monday, the IBEX stock market index fell to 5,905, which
was the lowest level in
nearly ten years.
When it hit 5,905 that represented a drop of about
12 percent over
just two trading days. If that happened in the United States,
it would be the equivalent of the Dow falling by about 1500 points in
48 hours.
#2 So
far this year, the Spanish stock market is down more
than 25 percent.
Back in 2008, the IBEX 35 was well over 15,000. Today it is
sitting just above 6,000.
#5 Thanks
to the problems in Spain, the euro continues to fall like a rock.
On Monday it hit a
new two year low against
the U.S. dollar, and it is near a twelve year low against the
Japanese yen.
#6 During
the first quarter of 2012, the Spanish economy contracted by 0.3
percent.
During the second quarter of 2012, the Spanish economy contracted
by 0.4
percent.
#7 Local
governments all over Spain are flat broke and need to be bailed out
by the broke national government. The following is from a
recent CNBC
article....
Adding to Madrid's woes, media reports suggested another half a dozen of Spain's 17 regional authorities, facing an undeclared funding crisis, were ready to follow Valencia in seeking aid from the central government.
#8 The
percentage of bad loans on the books of Spanish banks has reached an
18 year high.
European officials have already promised a 100
billion euro bailout for
Spain's troubled banking system, but most analysts agree that 100
billion euros will not be nearly enough.
#10 The
unemployment rate in Spain is up to an astounding 24.6
percent.
The unemployment rate in Spain is already higher than it was in the
United States at the peak of the Great Depression of the 1930s.
#12 The
Spanish government has just announced a whole bunch of new
tax increases and spending cuts which
will cause the Spanish economy to slow down even more. In
response to these austerity measures, people are taking to the
streets all over Spain. Last week, 100,000
demonstratorspoured
into the streets to protest in Madrid alone.
Sadly,
the nightmare in Spain is just beginning.
If
the yield on 10 year Spanish bonds stays above 7 percent, that is
going to be a really bad sign. According to the
Wall Street Journal,
the 7 percent level is key as far as investor confidence is
concerned....
Monday's dramatic market moves suggest Spain may be stuck in a spiral that culminates in a bailout from other euro-zone countries.
"The rise in the 10-year yield well beyond 7% carries a very distinct reminder of events in Greece in April 2010, Ireland in October 2010 and Portugal in February 2011," said analysts at Bank of New York Mellon. "In each case, a decisive move beyond 7% signaled the start of a collapse in investor confidence that, in each case, led to a bailout within weeks," they added.
So
keep an eye on that number in the weeks ahead.
Meanwhile,
the Spanish economy continues to get worse with each passing month.
So
just how bad are things in Spain right now?
Recently two noted Spanish economists were interviewed. One was always an optimist and one was always a pessimist. The optimist droned on and on about how bad things were in Spain, the dire situation with the regional debt, the huge problems overtaking the Spanish banks and the imminent collapse of the Spanish economy. In the end he said that the situation was so bad that the Spanish people were going to have to eat manure. The pessimist was shocked by the comments of his colleague who had never heard him speak in such a manner. When it was the pessimist’s turn to speak he said that he agreed with the optimist with one exception; the manure would soon run out.
That
may make you laugh, but for those in Europe going through these
horrific economic conditions it is no laughing matter.
On
Sunday, Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras actually told former
U.S. president Bill Clinton that Greece is already in a "Great
Depression".
Like
Spain, the unemployment rate in Greece is well above 20 percent and
the youth unemployment rate is above 50 percent.
The
only reason the Greek financial system has not totally collapsed is
because of outside assistance, but now there are indications that the
assistance may soon be cut off.
At
this point there are persistent rumors that
the IMF does not plan to give any more aid money to Greece unless
Greece "shapes up".
Sadly,
most Americans pay very little attention to what is going on in
Greece and Spain.
Most
Americans just assume that we will always have "the greatest
economy on earth" and that we can take prosperity for granted.
Unfortunately,
the truth is that the United States already has
more government debt per capita than
either Greece or Spain does.
Just
like Greece and Spain, we are also rapidly traveling down the road to
economic oblivion, and depression-like conditions will arrive in this
country soon enough.
So
enjoy these last months of economic prosperity while you still can.
A
whole lot of pain is on the horizon.
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